What is the significance of the grapes in the story of Boss Dharamsee?

📖 Chapter 35

The grapes in the story of Boss Dharamsee, recounted in Chapter 35, serve as a central element for a profound teaching. Initially, the grapes, which had seeds and were unwashed, represented a challenge to Dharamsee's preconceived notions, preferences, and medical advice. His dislike for them and his internal conflict symbolized his ego and skepticism. However, as Chapter 35 explains, when he finally surrendered to Baba's command to "Eat them up," the grapes miraculously became seedless. At this moment, the grapes transformed from an object of dislike into a medium of divine grace and a catalyst for faith. They demonstrated Baba's power to know one's innermost thoughts and to alter reality, turning what was undesirable into something "seedless and beneficial."


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